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Do school and equality education characteristics influence young children’s understanding of sex/gender constancy?

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Do school and equality education characteristics influence young children’s understanding of sex/gender constancy? / Alcock, Katie.
In: Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, Vol. 241, 105879, 31.05.2024.

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Alcock K. Do school and equality education characteristics influence young children’s understanding of sex/gender constancy? Journal of Experimental Child Psychology. 2024 May 31;241:105879. Epub 2024 Feb 16. doi: 10.1016/j.jecp.2024.105879

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@article{feb36ce9bae54cc6ba06fbcf371f40a3,
title = "Do school and equality education characteristics influence young children{\textquoteright}s understanding of sex/gender constancy?",
abstract = "In many cognitive developmental studies, young children ( < 6 years) fail to understand that changing the appearance of a person, object, or animal does not change its underlying reality. They appear to believe that a cat wearing a dog mask is genuinely a dog (appearance/reality distinction) and that a boy wearing a dress is genuinely a girl (sex/gender constancy). These skills may be affected by various influences: testing methods, training on the constancy of biological traits, child{\textquoteright}s or sibling{\textquoteright}s diagnosis of gender dysphoria, and child{\textquoteright}s diagnosis of autism. This study aimed to partially replicate the study of Arthur et al. (Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2009, Vol. 104, pp. 427–446) showing that experimental lessons emphasizing the constancy or otherwise of biological traits affected appearance/reality and sex/gender constancy performance. The study examined the influence of school lessons with content on sex/gender stereotyping and pro/anti constancy on the performance of young English children (mean age = 5;6 [years;months]; N = 58) on appearance/reality and sex/gender constancy tasks. Children performed above chance on sex/gender stability (change over time) but performed below chance on sex/gender constancy and appearance/reality tasks (change due to superficial alterations). These scores are comparable to those in nearly all previous studies. Children{\textquoteright}s scores were not influenced by school lesson content, although not all schools provided content. Conclusions are drawn about the effect of lesson content, which may be too diffuse and long term to affect performance. The level of children{\textquoteright}s performance and what this means in absolute terms about children{\textquoteright}s understanding of sex/gender stereotypes and the possibility of a child changing sex/gender is also discussed.",
keywords = "Cognitive development, Sex/gender constancy, Appearance/reality, Autism, Childhood gender dysphoria",
author = "Katie Alcock",
year = "2024",
month = may,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1016/j.jecp.2024.105879",
language = "English",
volume = "241",
journal = "Journal of Experimental Child Psychology",
issn = "0022-0965",
publisher = "ELSEVIER ACADEMIC PRESS INC",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Do school and equality education characteristics influence young children’s understanding of sex/gender constancy?

AU - Alcock, Katie

PY - 2024/5/31

Y1 - 2024/5/31

N2 - In many cognitive developmental studies, young children ( < 6 years) fail to understand that changing the appearance of a person, object, or animal does not change its underlying reality. They appear to believe that a cat wearing a dog mask is genuinely a dog (appearance/reality distinction) and that a boy wearing a dress is genuinely a girl (sex/gender constancy). These skills may be affected by various influences: testing methods, training on the constancy of biological traits, child’s or sibling’s diagnosis of gender dysphoria, and child’s diagnosis of autism. This study aimed to partially replicate the study of Arthur et al. (Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2009, Vol. 104, pp. 427–446) showing that experimental lessons emphasizing the constancy or otherwise of biological traits affected appearance/reality and sex/gender constancy performance. The study examined the influence of school lessons with content on sex/gender stereotyping and pro/anti constancy on the performance of young English children (mean age = 5;6 [years;months]; N = 58) on appearance/reality and sex/gender constancy tasks. Children performed above chance on sex/gender stability (change over time) but performed below chance on sex/gender constancy and appearance/reality tasks (change due to superficial alterations). These scores are comparable to those in nearly all previous studies. Children’s scores were not influenced by school lesson content, although not all schools provided content. Conclusions are drawn about the effect of lesson content, which may be too diffuse and long term to affect performance. The level of children’s performance and what this means in absolute terms about children’s understanding of sex/gender stereotypes and the possibility of a child changing sex/gender is also discussed.

AB - In many cognitive developmental studies, young children ( < 6 years) fail to understand that changing the appearance of a person, object, or animal does not change its underlying reality. They appear to believe that a cat wearing a dog mask is genuinely a dog (appearance/reality distinction) and that a boy wearing a dress is genuinely a girl (sex/gender constancy). These skills may be affected by various influences: testing methods, training on the constancy of biological traits, child’s or sibling’s diagnosis of gender dysphoria, and child’s diagnosis of autism. This study aimed to partially replicate the study of Arthur et al. (Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2009, Vol. 104, pp. 427–446) showing that experimental lessons emphasizing the constancy or otherwise of biological traits affected appearance/reality and sex/gender constancy performance. The study examined the influence of school lessons with content on sex/gender stereotyping and pro/anti constancy on the performance of young English children (mean age = 5;6 [years;months]; N = 58) on appearance/reality and sex/gender constancy tasks. Children performed above chance on sex/gender stability (change over time) but performed below chance on sex/gender constancy and appearance/reality tasks (change due to superficial alterations). These scores are comparable to those in nearly all previous studies. Children’s scores were not influenced by school lesson content, although not all schools provided content. Conclusions are drawn about the effect of lesson content, which may be too diffuse and long term to affect performance. The level of children’s performance and what this means in absolute terms about children’s understanding of sex/gender stereotypes and the possibility of a child changing sex/gender is also discussed.

KW - Cognitive development

KW - Sex/gender constancy

KW - Appearance/reality

KW - Autism

KW - Childhood gender dysphoria

U2 - 10.1016/j.jecp.2024.105879

DO - 10.1016/j.jecp.2024.105879

M3 - Journal article

VL - 241

JO - Journal of Experimental Child Psychology

JF - Journal of Experimental Child Psychology

SN - 0022-0965

M1 - 105879

ER -